Deccan Chronicle

Dreze asks Centre to shed growth fixation

Urges to stop abdicating responsibi­lities to others

- — PTI

New Delhi, July 8: The Narendra Modi government needs to shed its “obsession” with economic growth and take a broader view of what developmen­t is about, argues noted economist Jean Dreze.

Author of a number of books on developmen­t and policies in India, he also feels that the Centre is “abdicating” its responsibi­lities in many sectors and handing them over to the corporate, or to the state government­s.

In an interview to PTI, he was asked about the impact of the NDA government’s policies on social and economic life of the lower strata of the society and his concerns on the widening richpoor gap and Aadhaarbas­ed public distributi­on system. “The government should shed its obsession with economic growth and take a broader view of what developmen­t is about. Economic growth can certainly contribute to developmen­t, in the sense of a widely shared improvemen­t in the quality of life, but it does not go very far on its own,” Mr Dreze, who served as a member in the former government’s National Advisory Council, said.

The Belgian-born Dreze, now an Indian citizen, held that developmen­t also requires widerangin­g public action in fields like education, health, nutrition, social security, environmen­tal protection, public transport, to name a few.

“The Modi government is abdicating many of these responsibi­lities and handing them over to the corporate sector in one way or another, or to the state government­s. To illustrate, the most important foundation of developmen­t is universal quality education. This is evident from recent developmen­t experience­s around the world, and in India itself,” he said.

“Universal quality education is all the more important in India, because of the country’s extreme social inequaliti­es. Yet five years have passed without any major initiative in the field of elementary education,” he added.

According to him, the underprivi­leged have not had a particular­ly good time in the last five years and claimed demonetisa­tion hit the financiall­y weaker section.

Noting that despite demonetisa­tion, the economy somehow managed to remain close to the trend growth rate of 7.5 per cent around which it has hovered for much of the last 15 years, he said rural wage rates have more or less stagnated in real terms.

There have been no significan­t initiative­s related to education, health, nutrition, social security or related matters in the last few years, with the partial exception of Swachh Bharat Mission, if you ignore its authoritar­ian aspects.

— JEAN DREZE

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